That was beautiful. sigh I haven't blown through a book that fast in a LONG time. My one disappointment was how little we saw of Clare & Alba's lives after. I'd have liked to have seen just a few more future visits from Henry. Overall, though, this story was positively exquisite. I'm trying to imagine how a movie could do it justice, and I'm just not sure. It would take a delicate touch to not make the scenes from Clare's childhood have a proper tone.
Is it bad that I want a sequel with Alba?
Then we COULD see the characters some more! 
Oh, a couple comments:
Yeah, Henry had a tooth pulled because he kept losing the filling.
I assumed that the emptying of his stomach was why he always arrived hungry after traveling. Anything in his system that hadn't been metabolized disappeared. Of course, where it ended up would be the tricky part, as we never read of his clothes having a wad of food in the middle of them.
But yeah, that's one minor logic point that stumped me. Fortunately, the story is so compelling that it didn't bother me much.
The comparison to Journeyman is kinda superficial. The stories are similar enough that it does make you wonder, yet different enough to allow that just maybe the similarities are coincidental. I have to say, Journeyman's "rules" made this type of story much easier to film for television. But there were a couple things - Dan and Henry both being hungry afterwards, the running theme of feet/shoes - that make me a little uncomfortable as far as how closely the two premises resemble each other.
Is it bad that I want a sequel with Alba?


Oh, a couple comments:
Yeah, Henry had a tooth pulled because he kept losing the filling.
I assumed that the emptying of his stomach was why he always arrived hungry after traveling. Anything in his system that hadn't been metabolized disappeared. Of course, where it ended up would be the tricky part, as we never read of his clothes having a wad of food in the middle of them.

The comparison to Journeyman is kinda superficial. The stories are similar enough that it does make you wonder, yet different enough to allow that just maybe the similarities are coincidental. I have to say, Journeyman's "rules" made this type of story much easier to film for television. But there were a couple things - Dan and Henry both being hungry afterwards, the running theme of feet/shoes - that make me a little uncomfortable as far as how closely the two premises resemble each other.
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